Download - Web Services PHP Tutorial
Web Services Tutorial
Web Services Tutorial
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http://bit.ly/oaxVdy
(while you’re waiting, download the files!)
About Me
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• Lorna Jane Mitchell
• PHP Consultant/Developer
• Author
• API Specialist
• Project Lead on http://joind.in
• Twitter: @lornajane
• Website: http://lornajane.net
The Plan
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• Talk about web services in general
• Build a web service
• Consume a web service
• Talk about how to make excellent web services
The Plan
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• Talk about web services in general
• Build a web service
• Consume a web service
• Talk about how to make excellent web services
• (we’ll hide some actual textbook theory in there somewhere)
• Ask questions!
Theory and Introduction
What Is A Web Service?
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• Means of exposing functionality or data
• A lot like a web page, but for machines
• Integration between applications
• Separation within an application
Integration Between Applications
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Common to use an API internally as well as exposing it
Website
API
Data Store
3rd Party / Apps
Separation Within an Application
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Routing
ProductsAuth Images Orders
Separation Within an Application
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Routing
ProductsAuth Images Orders
Web Services and You
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This is not rocket science
You already know most of what you need!
Let’s Begin
Building Blocks
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You can make an API from any tools you like
• Existing MVC setup
• Simple PHP (as in these examples)
• Framework modules
• Component library
My First Web Service
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• Make a virtual host
• e.g. http://api.local
• Don’t forget to restart apache
• Add an entry to your hosts file
<VirtualHost * :80>ServerName api.localServerAdmin admin@localhostDocumentRoot /var/www/myapi/public
<Directory /var/www/myapi/public>AllowOverride AllOrder deny,allowAllow from All
</Directory></VirtualHost>
api.vhost
My First Web Service
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• Create the index.php file
• e.g. /var/www/myapi/public/index.php
$data = array ('format' => 'json' ,'status' => 'live');
echo json_encode ($data);
public/index.php
Consume Your Service
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• Use cURL from the command line
• curl http://api.local
• For more information about curl:
• http://curl.haxx.se/ - curl homepage
• http://bit.ly/esqBmz - my cheat sheet
JSON JavaScript Object Notation
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• Originally for JavaScript
• Native read/write in most languages
• Simple, lightweight format - useful for mobile
• In PHP we have json_encode() and json_decode()
• These work with arrays and objects
Our service returns:
{'format':'json','status':'live'}
Heartbeat Method
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• A method which does nothing
• No authentication
• Requires correct request format
• Gives basic feedback
• Shows that service is alive
Delivering A Web Service
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• Service
• Documentation
• Examples
• A help point
HTTP and Data Formats
HTTP
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HTTP is Hypertext Transfer Protocol. It is designed to exchangeinformation about a request/response.
• Status Codes (e.g. 200, 404)
• Headers (e.g. Content-Type, Authorization)
• Verbs (e.g GET, POST)
Status Codes
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Win or fail? Some common codes:
200 OK
204 No Content
302 Found
301 Moved Permanently
302 Found
400 Bad Request
401 Not Authorised
403 Forbidden
404 Not Found
500 Internal Server Error
For more, see: http://bitly.com/h03Dxe
Working with Status Codes in PHP
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We can observe status codes with curl, passing the -I switch
curl -I http://api.local
Let’s amend our web service, to return a 302 header
header ( "302 Found" , true , 302);
$data = array ('format' => 'json' ,'status' => 'live');
echo json_encode ($data);
HTTP Verbs
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• More than GET and POST
• PUT and DELETE to update and delete in a RESTful service
• HEAD, OPTIONS and others also specified
In REST, we use:
GET Read
POST Create
PUT Update
DELETE Delete
HTTP Headers
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Headers are the metadata about the content we send/receive
Useful headers:
• Accept and Content-Type: used for content format negotiation
• User-Agent: to identify what made the request
• Set-Cookie and Cookie: working with cookie data
• Authorization: controlling access
Accept Header
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What type of content can the consumer understand?
• -v with curl to see request and response headers
• -H to add headers
curl -v -H "Accept: text/html" http://api.local
Gives the output:
* About to connect() to api.local port 80 (#0)
* Trying 127.0.0.1... connected
* Connected to api.local (127.0.0.1) port 80 (#0)> GET / HTTP/1.1> User-Agent: curl/7.21.0 (i686-pc-linux-gnu) libcurl/7 .21.0 OpenSSL/0.9.8> Host: api.local> Accept: text/html>
Using the Accept Header
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We can work out what format the user wanted to see from the Acceptheader.
$data = array ('status' => 'live' ,'now' => time ());
if ( false !== strpos ($_SERVER[ 'HTTP_ACCEPT' ], 'text/html' )) {echo "<pre>" ;print_r ($data);echo "</pre>" ;
} else {// return jsonecho json_encode ($data);
}
public/headers.php
How to REALLY Handle Accept Headers
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Example accept header (from my browser)
text/html, application/xml;q=0.9, application/xhtml+x ml,image/png, image/jpeg, image/gif, image/x-xbitmap, * / * ;q=0.1
• See a much nicer example of this in headers-accept.php
• Taken almost entirely from the source of arbitracker
• http://arbitracker.org
• src/classes/request/parser.php
• Try this from curl, setting your own headers, and from your browser
Content-Type Header
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The Content-Type header: literally labels the contents of the response.We can include these in our examples:
$data = array ('status' => 'live' ,'now' => time ());
if ( false !== strpos ($_SERVER[ 'HTTP_ACCEPT' ], 'text/html' )) {header ( 'Content-Type: text/html' );echo "<pre>" ;print_r ($data);echo "</pre>" ;
} else {// return jsonheader ( 'Content-Type: application/json' );echo json_encode ($data);
}
public/headers.php
Handling XML Formats
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We can work with XML in PHP almost as easily
• Content type is text/xml or application/xml
• Two XML libraries in PHP
• SimpleXML bit.ly/g1xpaP
• DOM bit.ly/e0XMzd
• Give consumers a choice of formats: HTML, XML, JSON ...
Adding XML to Our Service
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$data = array ('status' => 'live' ,'now' => time ());
$simplexml = simplexml_load_string( '<?xml version="1.0" ?><data />' );foreach ($data as $key => $value) {
$simplexml->addChild($key, $value);}
header ( 'Content-Type: text/xml' );echo $simplexml->asXML();
public/headers.php
The result is this:
<?xml version="1.0"?><data><status>live</status><now>1302981884</now></d ata>
Versioning
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• Always include a version parameter or media type
http://example.com/api/v4/status
http://example.com/api/status
Content-Type: application/vnd.myapi.2+json
Data Formats
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• Handle multiple formats, by header or parameter
• JSON
• XML
• ?
• Common to detect header, allow parameter override
http://example.com/api/v4/status
Accept: application/json
http://example.com/api/v4/status?format=json
Accept: text/html
Statelessness
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• Request alone contains all information needed
• No data persistence between requests
• Resource does not need to be in known state
• Same operation performs same outcome
Consuming Services from PHP
Consuming Your First Web Service
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Three ways to consume web services:
• Via streams (e.g. file_get_contents() )
• Using the curl extension
• http://lrnja.net/I5JD9R
• Using Pecl_HTTP
• http://lrnja.net/I23yZj
Using File_Get_Contents
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This is the simplest, especially for a GET request
$response = file_get_contents ( 'http://api.local/' );var_dump ($response);
You can set more information in the stream context bit.ly/gxBAgV
Using Curl
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This extension is commonly available
$ch = curl_init ( 'http://api.local/' );curl_setopt ($ch, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER,true );$response = curl_exec ($ch);var_dump ($response);
Look out for the CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER; without it, this will echothe output
Using Pecl_HTTP
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This is the most powerful and flexible, and can easily be installed fromhttp://pecl.php.net
$request = new HTTPRequest( 'http://api.local/' , HTTP_METH_GET);$request->send();$response = $request->getResponseBody();var_dump ($response);
Strongly recommend pecl_http if you are able to install pecl modules onyour platform
Service Types
Web Service Types
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There are a few types of web service
• RESTful
• RPC (Remote Procedure Call)
• XML-RPC
• JSON-RPC
• Soap
RPC Services
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These services typically have:
• A single endpoint
• Method names
• Method parameters
• A return value
• Often all POST requests
A familiar model for us as developers
Soap
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• Not an acronym
• (used to stand for Simple Object Access Protocol)
• Special case of XML-RPC
• VERY easy to do in PHP
• Can be used with a WSDL
• Web Service Description Language
Soap Example: Library Class
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public function eightBall() {$options = array (
"Without a doubt" ,"As I see it, yes" ,"Most likely" ,"Reply hazy, try again" ,"Better not tell you now" ,"Concentrate and ask again" ,"Don't count on it" ,"Very doubtful" );
return $options[ array_rand ($options)];}
/public/soap/Library.php
Soap Server
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(don’t blink or you will miss it!)
include ( 'Library.php' );
$options = array ( 'uri' => 'http://api.local/soap' );$server = new SoapServer( NULL, $options);$server->setClass( 'Library' );
$server->handle();
/public/soap/index.php
Consuming a Soap Service
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To call PHP directly, we would do:
include ( 'Library.php' );
$lib = new Library();$response = $lib->eightBall();echo $response;
Over Soap:
$options = array ( 'uri' => 'http://myapi.local' ,'location' => 'http://myapi.local/soap/' );
try{$client = new SoapClient( NULL, $options);$response = $client->eightBall();echo $response;
} catch (SoapFault $e) {echo "ERROR: " . $e->getMessage();
}
Pros and Cons of Soap
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• Many languages have libraries for it
• .NET and Java programmers in particular like it
Pros and Cons of Soap
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• Many languages have libraries for it
• .NET and Java programmers in particular like it
• Weird things happen between languages regarding data types
• When it works, it’s marvellous
• When it doesn’t work, it’s horrid to debug (so I’ll show you how)
Pros and Cons of Soap
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• Many languages have libraries for it
• .NET and Java programmers in particular like it
• Weird things happen between languages regarding data types
• When it works, it’s marvellous
• When it doesn’t work, it’s horrid to debug (so I’ll show you how)
• WSDL is complicated!
Working with WSDLs
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WSDL stands for Web Service Description Language
• WSDLs were not designed for humans to read
• They are written in XML, and are very verbose
• If you do need to read one, start at the END and read upwards insections
• Soap uses very strict data typing, which is an unknown concept inPHP
Read about WSDLs: bit.ly/eNZOmp
Debugging Soap
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The Soap extension has some debug methods:
• Set the options to include trace=1 in the SoapClient
• getLastRequest() , getLastRequestHeaders() ,getLastResponse() , getLastResponseHeaders() are thenavailable
For all web service types, you can use:
• I like Wireshark (http://www.wireshark.org )
• Others use Charles (http://www.charlesproxy.com )
• If you like reading XML then use curl
• SoapUI (http://soapui.org )
Extending Our Service
Consistency
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• Important to retain
• Naming conventions
• Parameter validation rules
• Parameter order
• Just as you would in library code
The Action Parameter
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As a simple place to start, let’s add an action parameter.
// route the request (filter input!)$action = $_GET[ 'action' ];$library = new Actions();$data = $library->$action();
/rpc/index.php
Here’s the code for the Actions class
class Actions {public function getSiteStatus() {
return array ( 'status' => 'healthy' ,'time' => date ( 'd-M-Y' ));
}}
/rpc/actions.php
So try http://api.local/rpc/index.php?action=getSiteStatus
Small APIs
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• Beware adding new functionality
• Simple is maintainable
• Easy to use and understand
Adding an Action
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To add a new action, create a new method for the Actions class, returningan array to pass to the output handlers
public function addTwoNumbers($params) {return array ( 'result' => ($params[ 'a' ] + $params[ 'b' ]));
}
/rpc/actions.php
But how do we pass the parameters in? Something like this
// route the request (filter input!)$action = $_GET[ 'action' ];$library = new Actions();// OBVIOUSLY you would filter input at this point$data = $library->$action($_GET);
/rpc/index.php
Access Control
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A few common ways to identify users
• Username and password with every request
• Login action and give a token to use
• OAuth
• For internal applications, firewalls
RPC Service Example: Flickr
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Take a look at http://www.flickr.com/services/api/
• Supports multiple formats (for request and response)
• Is well-documented and consistent
• Has libraries helping users to consume it
• Offers both RPC and RESTful (kind of!) interfaces
• Follows true XML-RPC (seehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xml-rpc )
Vast numbers of applications using this API to provide flickr functionalityelsewhere
RPC vs REST
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We’ve seen an RPC service, but what about REST? The two are quitedifferent
• RPC services describe protocols, e.g. XML-RPC
• RPC is a familiar: functions and arguments
• REST is a set of principles
• Takes advantage of HTTP features
• Typically has "pretty URLs", e.g. Twitter is mostly RESTful
RESTful Web Service
REST
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• REpresentational State Transfer
• URLs are unique resource identifiers
• HTTP verbs indicate which operation should happen
• We have full CRUD operations on a series of resources
Here’s one I prepared earlier: /public/rest/
REST as a Religion
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Beware publishing a service labelled "RESTful"
• Someone will always tell you it isn’t
• They are probably right
• The strict rules around REST sometimes fit badly around businessrequirements
• Flamewars will ensue
Instead: "An HTTP Web Service"
Making Our Service Restful
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We’re aiming for URLs that look something like this:
• http://api.local/rest/user
• http://api.local/rest/user/3
• http://api.local/rest/user/3/friends
A specific item is a resource; where you request a list, e.g. /user , this iscalled a collection
All Requests to index.php
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We want to push all requests through index.php, there is an .htaccess filethat does this
<IfModule mod_rewrite.c>RewriteEngine OnRewriteBase /
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-fRewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-dRewriteRule ^(. * )$ index.php/$1 [L]
</IfModule>
/public/rest/.htaccess
Routing Within Our App
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So our routing depends on the URL and on the verb used, so ourcontrollers have a method per verb:
• GET /user
• Becomes UserController::GETAction()
// route the request (filter input!)$verb = $_SERVER[ 'REQUEST_METHOD'];$action_name = strtoupper ($verb) . 'Action' ;$url_params = explode ( '/' ,$_SERVER[ 'PATH_INFO' ]);$controller_name = ucfirst ($url_params[1]) . 'Controller' ;$controller = new $controller_name();$data = $controller->$action_name($url_params);
// output appropriately$view->render($data);
/public/rest/index.php
A Simple Controller
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Now in UserController we add a GETAction
class UsersController {public function GETAction($parameters) {
$users = array ();// imagine retreving data from models
if ( isset ($parameters[2])) {return $users[( int )$parameters[2]];
} else {return $users;
}}
}
/public/rest/controllers.php
Extending our Service
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Next we will add something to get the user’s friendshttp://api.local/users/1/friends
class UsersController {public function GETAction($parameters) {
$users = array ();$friends = array ();// imagine retreving data from models
if ( isset ($parameters[2])) {if ( isset ($parameters[3]) && $parameters[3] == 'friends' ) {
return $friends[( int )$parameters[2]];} else {
return $users[( int )$parameters[2]];}
} else {return $users;
}}
}
/public/rest/controllers.php
Hypermedia
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• The items returned are resources with their URLs
• This is hypermedia - providing links to related items/collections
• Allows a service to be self-documenting
• Allows a service to change its URLs - because they’re provided
Creating New Records
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RESTful services use POST for creating data, so we have POSTAction
curl -X POST http://api.local/users -d name="FredWeasley"
public function POSTAction() {// sanitise and validate data please!$data = $_POST;
// create a user from params$user[ 'name' ] = $data[ 'name' ];
// save the user, return the new id
// redirect userheader ( '201 Created' , true , 201);header ( 'Location: http://api.local/rest/users/5' );return $user;
}
/public/rest/controllers.php
Updating Records
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• To create: we used POST
• To update: we use PUT
The code looks basically the same, apart from:
// instead of this:$data = $_POST;
// use this:parse_str( file_get_contents ( 'php://input' ), $data);
Appropriate Status Codes for REST
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• GET
• 200 or maybe 302 if we found it somewhere else
• 404 if we can’t find it
• POST
• 201 and a location header to the new resource
• or 400 if we can’t create an item
• PUT
• 204 for OK (but no content)
• 400 if the supplied data was invalid
• DELETE
• 200 at all times, for idempotency
Responding to Failure
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• Use expected response format
• Collate all errors and return
• Help users help themselves
• Be consistent
• Be accurate
Delivering Services
Technical Aspects
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All PHP Best Practices apply equally to APIs
• Source control
• Unit/Integration testing
• Automated deployment
• Monitoring
Reliability and consistency are key
User Aspects
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Who will use your API?
• Offer API Docs
• Write a quick start for the impatient
• Show examples, as many as possible
• Tutorials, blog posts, links to forum answers, anything
• Respond to questions
Questions?
Thanks
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https://joind.in/6217
@lornajane
http://lornajane.net